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Category: 21. Business, economics, and employment
PEAY001. Native Americans
face funding challenges. Philanthropy Journal Online
1 November 1996.
Publication type: Journal article
Electronic access: Accessed online in 1997; file has been
removed.
Explains that, due to cutbacks in federal funding,
Native American groups are seeking assistance from private foundations.
Native American groups, like all grant seekers, must make their case important
to a prospective donor. They are often applying for grants not specifically
earmarked for Native Americans but, rather, geared toward a need such
as health, education, or poverty.
The Lumbee tribe receives most of its budget from state
block grants. The tribe received a Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust
grant of $30,000 to help needy Lumbee people over 60 purchase medications.
In 1994, according to the Foundation Center, only 6% of foundation grants
went to Native American groups. Mentions Native Americans in Philanthropy
(phone: 910-618-9749), a national nonprofit group headquartered in Lumberton
whose executive director is Donna
Chavis. The organization received a $60,400 grant in May, 1996,
from the W.W. Kellogg foundation to help develop a culturally
responsive fundraising curriculum in collaboration with the fundraising
school at the Indiana University Center for Philanthropy.
The larger funders of Native American projects in North
Carolina are Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation,
and Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust, all in Winston-Salem.
Additional Subjects: Grant seeking | Native
Americans in Philanthropy (Lumberton, NC)
This annotation was edited on: June 18, 2002
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